The Wall Street Journal - 21.08.2019

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Wednesday, August 21, 2019 |A8A


BYBENCHAPMAN

For the first time in its more
than 80-year history, the famed
Pepsi-Cola sign along the East
River in Long Island City,
Queens, will look different—at
least for a while. And some resi-
dents find the change hard to
swallow.
The nearly 60-foot tall sign,
which was added to the city’s
list of landmarks in 2016, will in-
clude an illuminated JetBlue logo
for the next couple of months. A

lit-up blue arrow and a picture of
an airplane in a cloud also will
be temporarily added to the sign.
The additions to the sign
started going up this week after
New York City granted Pepsi and
JetBlue approval for the changes.
The JetBlue signage will remain
until Oct. 1, according to the city,
as part of a promotion announc-
ing a partnership between the
two companies in which the air-
line will serve PepsiCo drinks.

Some Queens residents were
alarmed. Councilman Jimmy Van
Bramer, who represents Long Is-
land City, said some asked if it
was permanent. “It’s a pretty
significant change to a pretty
visible, iconic sign,” he said.
“Even if it’s temporary, it
shouldn’t be there.”
PepsiCo and JetBlue applied
for a permit for the temporary
installation in July, and it was
approved by Landmarks Preser-

vation Commission staffers, the
city said. A commission spokes-
woman said the permit didn’t re-
quire a hearing or further com-
munity approval because it won’t
be up for more than 180 days.
A spokesman representing
both PepsiCo and JetBlue said
the companies also received ap-
provals from the other entities
that control the park.
—Katie Honan
and Leslie Brody

A New York Police Depart-
ment sergeant will face a dis-
ciplinary trial this year over
her role in the 2014 death of
Eric Garner, Mayor Bill de Bla-
sio said on Tuesday.
Sgt. Kizzy Adonis is ac-
cused of failing to adequately
supervise former Officer Dan-
iel Pantaleo during a confron-
tation with Mr. Garner on a
Staten Island sidewalk, NYPD
officials said.
Police Commissioner James
O’Neill fired Mr. Pantaleo on
Monday for not releasing the
43-year-old Mr. Garner from a
chokehold as he tried to ar-
rest him for allegedly selling
loose cigarettes, even as Mr.
Garner struggled and com-
plained, “I can’t breathe.”
Sgt. Adonis was the super-
visor on the scene during the
incident, NYPD officials said.
Sgt. Adonis, who has

prohibited chokehold, but said
he might have made the same
mistake in similar circum-
stances.
Officer Pantaleo’s lawyer,
Stuart London, has said he
would appeal Mr. O’Neill’s de-

cision.
Mr. Garner’s death was
ruled a homicide by the city’s
chief medical examiner, but a
Staten Island grand jury in
2014 declined to indict Mr.
Pantaleo on criminal charges

related to the incident.
Federal prosecutors de-
clined to bring civil-rights
charges against Mr. Pantaleo
last month after concluding
they lacked sufficient evi-
dence to prove he willfully vi-

GREATER NEW YORK


served on the NYPD for 17
years and has no prior disci-
plinary history, didn’t respond
to requests for comment.
She was placed on modified
duty in 2016 concerning her
actions related to Mr. Garner’s
death but returned to her full
duties in 2018.
In a television interview
broadcast on Tuesday, Mr. de
Blasio said Sgt. Adonis’s ad-
ministrative trial would be the
NYPD’s last disciplinary action
in connection with the Garner
case.
“That will be concluded
this year,” the mayor said of
the trial for Sgt. Adonis. “That
will end all the disciplinary is-
sues being handled by the
NYPD.”
Mr. Garner, who lived on
Staten Island, died after offi-
cers, including Mr. Pantaleo,
attempted to arrest him in
front of a store.
Mr. Pantaleo was accused
of recklessly using force by
chokehold and intentional
strangulation.
In announcing his decision
to fire Mr. Pantaleo on Mon-
day, Mr. O’Neill faulted the
34-year-old officer for using a

olated Mr. Garner’s rights.
Mr. Garner’s mother, Gwen
Carr, said in an interview
Tuesday that Mr. O’Neill
should fire Sgt. Adonis for
failing to prevent her son’s
death, and urged him to act as
soon as possible.
“All of the officers who
were involved in my son’s
death should stand account-
able,” Ms. Carr said. “Charges
were brought years ago. Why
are we waiting now?”
Mr. O’Neill’s decision to
fire Mr. Pantaleo was wel-
comed by advocates of law-
enforcement reform, includ-
ing Ms. Carr. But the
commissioner still faces criti-
cism for not taking a more
aggressive approach to police
accountability.
Mr. O’Neill also faces oppo-
sition from the police union.
Police Benevolent Associa-
tion President Patrick Lynch
on Monday called for a vote of
no confidence in the commis-
sioner in response to Mr. Pan-
taleo’s termination.
“The police commissioner
needs to know he’s lost his
police department,” Mr. Lynch
said.

NYPD Sergeant Faces Disciplinary Trial


Kizzy Adonis is
accused of failing to
adequately supervise
ex-Officer Pantaleo

Eric Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, said Sgt. Adonis should be fired for not preventing her son’s death.

BEBETO MATTHEWS/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Iconic Pepsi Sign in Queens Will Share Top Billing With JetBlue


MARK KAUZLARICH FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


needs more regulations sur-
rounding the ticket sellers.
“Requiring companies to be
transparent and honest with
their customers should be the
universal standard,” she said
in a statement.
Statue Cruises is the only
boat line permitted to take
people to Liberty and Ellis is-
lands. It sells tickets that cost
$18.50 for adults online and at
Castle Clinton, the historic
fort in the Battery near the
dock.
The company didn’t imme-
diately respond to a request
for comment.
For years, some sellers have
tricked people into buying
tickets for boat rides that
don’t stop at either island,
barraging visitors with
pitches, officials said.
Sometimes people from
other boat companies wear T-
shirts or vests with an image
of the Statue of Liberty, which
confuses people, officials said.
They often sell one-hour
boat tours for up to $40 a per-
son that just sail around the
statue’s base without stop-
ping. Some vendors take peo-
ple on a bus to get to boats
that leave from other piers.
Ms. Chin said the proposed
rule would help, but the city
also needs to develop more
regulations around the sales.
“While this is a great first
step, it is clear the city needs a
comprehensive framework to
address the aggressive and
fraudulent ticket selling prac-
tices that have spoiled too many
Statue of Liberty experiences
and—in extreme cases—have
put lives in danger,” she said.

Vendors hawking tickets to
the Statue of Liberty would
have to let buyers know if
their boat will actually land at
Liberty Island under a pro-
posed rule that New York City
officials hope will help rein in
aggressive and illegal pitches.
The rule, proposed by the
city’s Department of Con-
sumer and Worker Protection,
would also require sellers to
disclose on the ticket whether
their boat will dock at nearby
Ellis Island, home of the Ellis
Island National Immigration
Museum.
It would also prohibit ticket
sellers from charging people
for a ride that should be free,
like the Staten Island Ferry, or
lying about where the boat
will stop. It isn’t clear what
the penalty for violations
would be.
The changes come after the
city has battled illegal ticket
sellers who often bombard un-
suspecting tourists at the Bat-
tery, a park at the tip of Man-
hattan where boats to the
Statue of Liberty and Ellis Is-
land depart.
A spokeswoman for the city
said the proposed rule would
protect consumers, especially
tourists, from being scammed.
There will be a Sept. 16 hear-
ing on the proposal before it
becomes an official rule.
City Councilwoman Marga-
ret Chin, a Democrat who rep-
resents lower Manhattan, said
the proposed rule would help
bring order to what can be a
chaotic and hostile environ-
ment. But she thinks the city

BYKATIEHONAN

City to Clamp Down


On Statue of Liberty


Tour-Boat Scams


Ballyhoo is negotiating a
settlement with the city, a com-
pany spokesman said. City Hall
representatives didn’t return
an email seeking comment.
In a statement, Ballyhoo
CEO Adam Shapiro said its
operations wouldn’t be de-
terred by the new state law.
Company lawyers said they
believe it simply offers clarity
about what can be displayed.
“Ballyhoo intends to con-
tinue providing an innovative
platform that encourages cre-
ativity, collaboration and com-
munity,” Mr. Shapiro said.

Democrat from Manhattan, in-
troduced legislation in June
after New York City officials
sued Ballyhoo Media, which
operates digital billboards.
The company, which
launched in Miami, started us-
ing a barge in New York last
October.
The city claimed in federal
court that the floating bill-
boards were a public nuisance
and violated zoning laws. The
city established water-based
advertising restrictions in
1964, according to court pa-
pers.

1,500 feet of their shore.
“This action will help make
our waters more enjoyable
and safer for everyone,” Mr.
Cuomo said Tuesday.
Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Dem-
ocrat who represents parts of
Manhattan’s West Side, said
floating billboards are an eye-
sore, as well as a distraction
to drivers and other boaters.
“Billboards belong in Times
Square, not in the middle of
the Hudson and East rivers,”
he said in a statement.
Mr. Hoylman and Assem-
blyman Richard Gottfried, a

Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed
a law Tuesday banning float-
ing digital billboards in New
York—flashing fixtures on the
waterways around Manhattan.
The new law, which takes
effect immediately, bans ves-
sels from operating, mooring
or docking in state waters
while displaying a billboard
that uses “flashing, intermit-
tent or moving lights.”
It also allows localities
across the state to regulate
such floating billboards within

BYJIMMYVIELKIND

Gov. Cuomo Signs a Law Banning Floating Digital Billboards


Ticket sellers engaged tourists in lower Manhattan in July.

The Morgan Library & Mu-
seum is the latest New York
City cultural organization to
go gourmet.
The institution is collabo-
rating with the James Beard
award-winning chef Tom
Colicchio to revamp the menu
at its dining spaces, the Mor-
gan said.
Mr. Colicchio plans to bring
a contemporary American ap-
proach to the culinary offer-
ings at the Morgan, which has
been a fixture in Manhattan’s
Murray Hill neighborhood for
nearly a century.
The menu items he has set
for the Morgan range from a
Wagyu burger with balsamic
onions to chicken paillard with
heirloom tomatoes.

Mr. Colicchio is behind a
number of New York City res-
taurants, including the ac-
claimed Craft, which opened in


  1. He also is the head judge
    and executive producer of “Top
    Chef,” the TV cable series.
    Restaurant Associates , the
    New York City company that
    handles dining operations at
    several cultural institutions lo-
    cally and nationally, led the
    push to bring Mr. Colicchio to
    the Morgan.
    Earlier this year, Restaurant
    Associates announced a similar
    effort at the Metropolitan Mu-
    seum of Art’s main location on
    Fifth Avenue, where it brought
    the Michelin-starred chef John
    Fraser aboard. Restaurant As-
    sociates has managed dining at
    the museum for decades.
    The partnerships between


the culinary and cultural worlds
go beyond these examples.
Union Square Hospitality
Group, the New York City res-
taurant company headed by
Danny Meyer, runs dining es-
tablishments at the Museum
of Modern Art and the Whit-
ney Museum of American Art.
Union Square also recently
launched Cedric’s, a bar at The
Shed, the cultural center con-
nected to the Hudson Yards
development.
Also of note: Restaurateur
Stephen Starr, known for such
New York City establishments
as Morimoto, Upland and Le
Coucou, recently announced
that he will operate a “grand
cafe” at Fotografiska, a six-
story photography-exhibition
space in Manhattan slated to
open later this year.

Ed Brown, president of res-
taurant services for Restau-
rant Associates, said the push
to upgrade culinary programs
at cultural institutions reflects
a desire to offer a “holistic ex-
perience” that goes beyond
the art on the walls.
Mark Walhimer, a museum
consultant and author of the
book “Museums 101,” said the
gourmet emphasis could run
contrary to the need for cul-
tural institutions to welcome a
public that reflects the city’s
socioeconomic diversity. He
cautioned that not all attend-
ees could afford the upscale
dining options the institutions
are touting.
“I don’t know if that’s the
announcement you want to be
making in this climate,” Mr.
Walhimer said.

BYCHARLESPASSY

Chef to Redo Morgan Library Menu


KEVIN HAGEN FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The floating billboards have been outlawed in New York state.

STEVE REMICH FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


NY
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